Article
Bone marrow cell transplantation to the myocardium of a patient with heart failure due to Chagas' disease
Registro en:
VILAS-BOAS, F. et al. Bone marrow cell transplantation to the myocardium of a patient with heart failure due to Chagas' disease. Arquivos Brasileiros de Cardiologia, v. 82, n. 2, p. 185-187, fev. 2004.
0066-782X
Autor
Vilas-Boas, Fábio
Feitosa, Gilson Soares
Soares, Milena Botelho Pereira
Pinho Filho, Joel Alves
Mota, Augusto César de Andrade
Almeida, Augusto José Gonçalves de
Carvalho, Cristiane Costa
Carvalho, Heitor Ghissoni de
Oliveira, Adriano Dourado de
Santos, Ricardo Ribeiro dos
Resumen
We report the first case of bone marrow cell transplantation to the myocardium of a patient with heart failure due to chagas' disease. The patient is a 52-year-old man
with chronic heart failure, NYHA functional class III, despite the optimized clinical therapy. The procedure consisted
of aspiration of 50 mL of bone marrow through
puncture of the iliac crest, followed by filtration, separation of the mononuclear cells, resuspension, and intracoronary
injection. The left ventricular ejection fraction at rest, measured using radionuclide ventriculography with
labeled red blood cells prior to transplantation, was 24%,
and, after 30 days, it increased to 32% with no change in the medicamentous schedule. The following measurements were assessed before and 30 days after transplantation:
left ventricular end diastolic diameter (82 mm and 76 mm, respectively); Minnesota living with heart failure questionaire
score (55 and 06, respectively); and distance walked in the 6-minute walking test (513 m and 683 m, respectively).
Our findings show that intracoronary injection of bone marrow cells may be performed, suggesting that this
is a potentially safe and effective procedure in patients with due to Chagas' disease heart failure.